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| 裏面の説明 | Severely abstracted and disjointed horse advancing left, its body decomposed into discrete pellets, crescents, and curved limb segments arranged across the field in the typical Durotrigan manner. Multiple large globular pellets dominate the upper field, representing the body or spine of the animal, while curved strokes below indicate the legs. A single pellet appears below the horse, serving as a ground element. No charioteer, wheel, or legend is present; the design is entirely anepigraphic and represents the most schematised stage of Durotrigan stater development. |
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| 鋳造所 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 鋳造数 | ND (58 BC - 45 BC) |
| 追加情報 |
The Durotriges occupied the southwestern corner of Britain — roughly modern Dorset and Somerset — and their coinage tells a story of deliberate isolation. While neighboring tribes maintained trade contacts with Gaul and adopted increasingly refined coin designs in response, the Durotriges moved in the opposite direction, progressively debasing their silver and abstracting their designs to near-illegibility. The period this piece covers, 58–45 BC, coincides almost exactly with Caesar's Gallic campaigns, which disrupted cross-Channel trade networks that British tribes had relied upon for generations.
By the terminal issues of this series, billon content had dropped so severely that some specimens are classified as bronze with silver wash.